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The Best Quentin Tarantino Directed Movies Throughout The Years

By Michael Stewart


Few directors have such a distinct style that you can tell a movie is theirs without any previous knowledge. In my opinion, one of those directors is Quentin Tarantino. Tarantino manages to showcase his personality and unique sense of storytelling in any movie he is associated with. His is one of the true auteurs of his generation, and the movie business is better for having him around.

When it comes to choosing Quentin Tarantino's best movies, it is not such an easy task as they are all great. Here are my top five favorites.

Reservoir Dogs ranks in as the number 63 film of all time according to the Internet Movie Database, and with good reason. This was one of Tarantino's first films, but still remains one of his best.

The story of the "The Bride", or Kill Bill as it is better known, has to be one of his best films. In my opinion Kill Bill: Volume 2 was the stronger film, just because it struck a better balance between fight scenes and story lines. Both movies are awesome though.

It is tough to make a list of Quentin Tarantino directed or written films without mentioning the Mecca of his movies, Pulp Fiction. This is easily one of my favorite movies of all time and it is amazing it didn't win an Academy Award for Best Picture. That's what happens when you go up against Forrest Gump and The Shawshank Redemption in the same year.

One film of Tarantino's that does not get enough love is Jackie Brown. This is an excellently executed script featuring a star studded cast including Pam Grier, Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Keaton, Robert De Niro, Chris Tucker and Bridget Fonda.

Inglorious Basterds may have dethroned Pulp Fiction as my favorite Tarantino film of all. This movie is clearly a work of fiction, but it is a depiction of World War 2 as only Quentin Tarantino could envision it. The opening scene of dialogue between Christoph Waltz and Denis Menochet is brilliant.

With Kill Bill Volume 3 reportedly slated for 2014 and his only visible credit, it might be longer than we want before we see another Tarantino film. I hope this is not the case.




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